I was playing in Titan Poker’s $200GP Freeroll Rebuy last night, and ended up winning the whole thing. I played solid poker in the beginning portion and began amassing chips. At the end of the rebuy period I was among the chip leaders.
The chip leader of the tournament was also at my table. I used this as my opportunity to begin playing more aggressive, daring others to challenge my stack. The other people at my table were more concerned with the chip leader, and wanted to take a bit of his stack more than they wanted to take a piece of mine.
I was able to maintain a tight image while doing this, as every time I had to show my hand I had the winner. I was siphoning my opponents chips into my coffers, and people began falling out of the tournament as the blinds became substantial.
Going into the final table I was a slight chip leader. Nothing spectacular occurred at the final table for a long while, with a marginal amount of chips shifting around. I lost about half my stack when I doubled up a player who caught a flush on the river to beat my two pair. I promptly returned the favor by knocking him out on the next hand with a flush of my own, and I was back on top again.
With 9 players left, I got dealt pocket queens, and took another player out, making me a massive chip leader over the table. We lost another player when my AK held up against AJ. I soon found pocket queens again and knocked two people out when I lucked out and caught a Q on the river for a full house to beat a set of kings.
Down to 5, I now had more than half of the chips, and whenever I had a good hand I raised all-in and dared everybody to call me and risk their tournament. I was folding enough so that they knew I wasn’t pushing with nothing, but they had no way of knowing just how good of a hand I had. People began calling with cards like A7, K10, and other such hands. I knocked out the next 3 players in this manner to bring us to heads up.
My opponent folded to my big blind on the very first hand of heads up. On the next hand in the small blind, I found myself holding AA. I just called and the flop came down king high. The turn was meaningless. My opponent made a small bet, which I called after waiting a few seconds. The river was a J and I immediately pushed all-in to force my opponent to make a decision. He called and showed his K4 for a pair of kings. I had slowplayed my aces to perfection, and thanks to my track record of pushing whenever I had hit even one of my cards, I managed to maneuver my opponent into calling. And that was the end of the tournament.